Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The baseline will be the sector average emissions per unit of output.
Thus, labor costs per unit of output have been rising inexorably.
If they want to sell extra units of output, they must lower price.
That sent the labor costs for each unit of output up 2.3 percent, compared with a 3.5 percent increase in 1985.
Productivity is usually defined in terms of units of output per worker.
Relative decoupling indicates a decrease in the environmental impact per unit of output.
The anticipated cost of producing a unit of output.
The seller is likely to raise the price the seller charges for each unit of output.
In this case productivity is defined as follows: input consumption per one unit of output volume.
An automobile industry may need to sell 519, 001 units of output (cars) to achieve the same level of efficiency.
Assume that the traditional sector pays workers one unit of output which is subsequently spent equally by them in all sectors.
Thus the costs of producing the marginal unit of output has two components:
Summarize the flow of physical units of output.
In 2011 the company was hoping to match the 258,000 units of output achieved in 2005, the plant's top production year till that point.
As a result, labor costs per unit of output have been rising more slowly during this expansion than during any since the 1940's.
In the last three years, he said, the number of worker-hours Delphi uses to produce a unit of output has dropped 31 percent.
Since fewer inputs are consumed to produce a unit of output with every improvement in process, the real cost of production falls over time.
Because the firm faces a downward sloping demand curve for its product, it must lower price to sell extra units of output.
However, non-labor costs - including rent, capital and indirect taxes -associated with each unit of output increased 1.1 percent.
If demand is at level, the industry becomes a natural duopoly (and it will not cease being so until well after units of output are demanded).
To do this, we assume that all firms determine their prices by adding a profit margin to the cost of a unit of output.
It assumes average variable costs are constant per unit of output, at least in the range of likely quantities of sales.
Firms will produce additional output while the cost of producing an extra unit of output is less than the price they would receive.
Consider a firm which initially has a stock of 100 machines, each of which can produce 50 units of output per time period.
Can we be certain that aggregate demand will be sufficient to take up the OQ 1 units of output produced?